Yglesias points to yet another silly TSA rule: extra scrutiny for people wearing headgear. He’s not impressed:
People tend to forget this, but pre-9/11, American airplanes were almost never hijacked. Since 9/11, we’ve re-enforced cockpit doors, which would have been sufficient to foil the 9/11 plot. We’ve also gotten more careful about handing out silverware that can be used as a weapon, which would have been sufficient to foil the 9/11 plot, and about letting people take knives on planes more generally. What’s more, passengers now know that they should resist hijacking attempts. The three successful 9/11 hijackings succeeded because up until that day passengers were told not to attempt to resist hijackers. The one time passengers did resist, their resistance was successful.
At this point, you’ve got to figure that even without all this crap about taking your shoes off and not carrying liquids on the plane, that airplanes have become relatively unattractive targets for terrorists. You could blow up a train or a bus, open fire on a crowded subway station, try to hijack a truck carrying deadly chemicals, or do any number of additional things. Endlessly piling on more and more security measures to air travel is pointless, especially when you consider how much safer it is to travel by plane than by car in terms of accidents.
Well said.